Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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Fix user guide url
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Replace from
https://codeigniter.com/user_guide/*
to
https://codeigniter.com/userguide3/*
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Update copyright date to 2019
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Annual copyright update
Conflicts resolved:
system/libraries/Cache/drivers/Cache_apcu.php
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Fix misc inconsistencies between code and doc comments
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- Remove PHP version from license notices
- Bump year number in copyright notices
- Recommend PHP 5.4 or newer to be used
- Tell Travis-CI to test on PHP 5.3.0 instead of the latest 5.3 version
Related: #3450
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Close #1590
Close #3200
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Close #3001
Close #3232
Related: #3244
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The core shouldn't depend on constants that are not defined by itself
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Update copyright notices from 2013 to 2014.
And update one calendar example in user_guide from year 2013/2014 to
2014/2015.
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requests (issue #1743)
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- Removed commented lists of constants from the three reference conventions,
replacing each with the URLs at which more information can be found.
- Renamed a few constants to more closely reflect CodeIgniter conventions.
- Modified a couple of lines which were in violation of the CI Style Guide.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hunsaker <danhunsaker@gmail.com>
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Re-allocated exit status codes according to three references, which follow:
BSD sysexits.h:http://www.gsp.com/cgi-bin/man.cgi?section=3&topic=sysexits
GNU recomendations:http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/Exit-Status.html
Bash scripting:http://tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/exitcodes.html
The GNU recommendations stem from and expand upon the standard C/C++ library (stdlibc)
definitions, while also suggesting some best-practice conventions which happen to prevent
exit status code collisions with bash, and probably other shells.
The re-allocated codes are now mapped to constant values, set in *application/config/constants.php*,
and used throughout the CodeIgniter core. They would additionally be used in *index.php*,
but the constants file hasn't been loaded at that point, so the integer values are used
instead, and a comment follows each such use with amplifying information on why that
particular value was selected.
Finally, the errors documentation has been updated accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hunsaker <danhunsaker@gmail.com>
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Specific codes are as follows, but can easily be changed if a different order/breakdown makes more sense:
- 0: Success; everything executed as planned
- 1: Configuration Error; something is wrong with/in the configuration file(s)
- 2: Class Not Found; what it says
- 3: Driver Method Unsupported; the method you're trying to use on a Driver doesn't exist
- 4: File Not Found; 404 error
- 5: Database Error; something is broken in the database somewhere
- 6: Invalid Input; the user attempted to submit a request with invlaid characters in 1+ key names
7 through 26 are reserved for future use
- 27: Generic Error; generated by show_error() when the status code is >= 100
28 through 127 are errors generated by user applications, normally by using show_error() with a status code below 100
128 through 254 should not be used by applications, as they are reserved by system-level functions
- 255: PHP Fatal Error; automatically generated by PHP for fatal errors, and therefore not allowed for our use
Status codes below 100 are shifted up by 28 to place them in the user error range. It may make more sense to have these codes
left alone and instead shift the CI errors into the 101 through 127 space, but that's not what I opted for here.
It would probably also be a good idea to replace the hard-coded numbers with constants or some such, but I was in a bit of a
hurry when I made these changes, so I didn't look around for the best place to do this. With proper guidance, I could
easily amend this commit with another that uses such constant values.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hunsaker <danhunsaker@gmail.com>
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Also partially fixes issue #1295, fixes inconsistencies in some page-level docblocks and adds include checks in language files.
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CI_Config::_assign_to_config()
Existance of _assign_to_config() is pointless as this method
consists just of a foreach calling CI_Config::set_item() and
is only called by CodeIgniter.php - moved that foreach() in
there instead.
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that they don't differ from the rest
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Yes I know PHP 5.4 just came out, and yes I know PHP 5.3 has lovely features, but there are plenty of corporate systems running on CodeIgniter and PHP 5.3 still is not widely supported enough. CodeIgniter is great for distributed applications, and this is the highest we can reasonably go without breaking support. PHP 5.3 will most likely happen in another year or so. Fingers crossed on that one anyway...
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